What are Ilhan Omar’s most recent financial disclosures and where can I find them?
Executive summary
Ilhan Omar’s most recent publicly reported annual financial disclosure (for the 2024 reporting year) was filed in May 2025 and shows household assets—many tied to businesses associated with her husband, Timothy Mynett—valued in ranges that produce a reported household net-worth estimate from roughly $6 million up to $30 million (reports vary by parser) [1] [2] [3]. The official source for House financial disclosures is the House Clerk’s public disclosure repository; LegiStorm and the Federal Election Commission provide parsed copies and campaign finance filings as complementary records [4] [5] [6].
1. What the recent disclosure actually shows — big ranges, marital assets
Omar’s latest annual disclosure, filed in May 2025 for the 2024 calendar year, lists multiple assets and a small number of liabilities; reporting outlets note the filings include high-valued equity ranges for LLCs such as Rose Lake Capital and eStCru LLC (the winery), which are tied to her husband’s businesses and drive the top-end household valuation [1] [2] [3]. News summaries emphasize the filing uses broad ranges rather than exact figures, producing headline net-worth estimates that vary widely from outlet to outlet [2] [7].
2. Where to read the primary documents — Clerk of the House and Legislative Resource Center
The canonical location for members’ financial disclosure PDFs is the House Clerk’s public disclosure site and the Legislative Resource Center; the Clerk’s repository hosts official PDFs of disclosures and the Legislative Resource Center maintains public access to those filings [4]. LegiStorm offers an alternate aggregated page that lists Omar’s disclosures and filing dates for quick access to specific reports [5].
3. Complementary records — campaign finance and third‑party parsers
Campaign receipts and disbursements for Omar’s authorized committees are available through the Federal Election Commission’s candidate page, which lists receipts and disbursements by period and can be useful to cross-check fundraising noted in media summaries [6]. Independent services such as Quiver Quantitative parse the House disclosure into line items and produce net‑worth estimates and fundraising tallies; Quiver reported parsed holdings and estimated a congressional net worth figure based on those ranges [2].
4. Why headlines differ — methodology, marital attribution, and valuation ranges
Journalistic and blog accounts diverge because the disclosures report asset-value ranges and sometimes attribute those household assets differently. Several outlets highlighted that large valuations stem from entities associated with her husband, and that the filing’s ranges (for example, millions for Rose Lake Capital and eStCru) yield widely different headline numbers depending on whether articles treat the holdings as joint household assets or Omar’s personal assets alone [1] [3] [2]. Analysts also note the filings show limited taxable income from those entities in the reported year, meaning high paper valuations did not necessarily correspond to large reported cash income in 2024 [8].
5. Disputes, corrections and fact‑checking context
Fact‑checkers and mainstream outlets have pushed back on simplified viral claims about Omar’s wealth. Snopes and other reporting emphasize that Omar’s earlier filings showed a negative net worth in 2019 and that the 2024/2025 filing lists a mix of assets and liabilities, with the wealth largely reflecting business valuations rather than liquid cash—and that many outlets conflate household and personal holdings when producing single net‑worth numbers [1] [9]. The available sources show competing narratives: some conservative outlets frame the document as evidence of a sudden “$30 million” fortune, while fact‑checkers and outlets stress the role of valuation ranges and spousal ownership in producing that headline [3] [9].
6. How to verify for yourself — concrete next steps
To inspect the primary records, download Omar’s PDF disclosure from the House Clerk’s public disclosure files or the Legislative Resource Center, and compare it to parsed versions on LegiStorm [4] [5]. For campaign fundraising and committee finance details, consult Omar’s FEC candidate page for receipts and disbursements [6]. Use multiple sources because third‑party parsers (Quiver, OpenSecrets, LegiStorm) apply different assumptions when converting disclosure ranges into single net‑worth figures [2] [10].
Limitations: available sources do not mention the specific file name or direct PDF URL for the May 2025 filing on the Clerk site in the search results provided, and they do not provide a single authoritative dollar figure—only reporting of ranges and parsed estimates [4] [2]. Where outlets disagree, the difference stems from treatment of marital assets and how parsers convert disclosure ranges into single‑number net‑worth estimates [1] [3].